Thanks, Professor Osborne, for the great lecture! I really liked it. Just a quick thought: maybe for those long theorems, it might be helpful to have them displayed on a screen instead of writing them out. A lot of work to write them down.
Hi Professor Osborne, I was wondering if you've seen/heard of Peter Woit's book entitled "Quantum Theory, Groups and Representations"? That seems to discuss Quantum Theory with a focus on representation theory, along the lines of this lecture series you're providing. It might be worth checking out and I would also like to know your thoughts on it :D
many thanks for your comment: I have not read the book. I will take a look. (BTW: my course closely follows the excellent book of Serre, which you can regard as the textbook for this lecture series.)
@@tobiasjosborne I was also wondering about your thoughts on Peter Woit's book. I feel that a similar approach is being provided by both Woit and yourself. Thank you for your work and inspiration.
Thankyou for your comment. Problem sheets will not be distributed for this course. (As a substitute you can just do the problems in the book of Serre as they are well designed.)
Where can I learn about this more general stuff regarding symmetries in the context of physics such as that which you mention around 57:00 with fusion categories and replacing composition with categories and so forth?
it is by far not the best reference, but you could take a look at our notes arxiv.org/abs/1811.06670 . At least, these are a good place to find better references. I hope this helps; sincerely, Tobias Osborne
Thank you for your videos! I would love to make a small donation as your lectures have provided so much value to me. Do you have a Patreon or some other platform where I could make a contribution to your work?
Many thanks for your comment! It is really humbling that you would be willing to make a donation! As it happens these videos are produced on (and with) university property. Because my work is publicly funded, I am actually not allowed to accept any form of payment or donation. My channel is not monetised. However, I am currently in the process of finding a legal way to donate potential profits to charity (not so easy, but I am investigating possibilities). If I manage to find a good way to do this then I will revisit this comment and post about ways to contribute. Until then, best wishes!
Welcome Back, Professor Tobias Osborne.
Really waiting for the next video!! Thank you very much for your insights in group representations, super useful!! 🎉
He is BACK 😍
We missed you
He's back 🎉🎉🎉🎉
Thank You so Much for this useful lecture, Professor.
Thanks, Professor Osborne, for the great lecture! I really liked it. Just a quick thought: maybe for those long theorems, it might be helpful to have them displayed on a screen instead of writing them out. A lot of work to write them down.
Thank you, professor.
Thank you!
Thank you
Thank you professor for the Wonderful course
Can I get the basic book on symmetries and quantum mechanics
Hi Professor Osborne, I was wondering if you've seen/heard of Peter Woit's book entitled "Quantum Theory, Groups and Representations"? That seems to discuss Quantum Theory with a focus on representation theory, along the lines of this lecture series you're providing. It might be worth checking out and I would also like to know your thoughts on it :D
many thanks for your comment: I have not read the book. I will take a look. (BTW: my course closely follows the excellent book of Serre, which you can regard as the textbook for this lecture series.)
@@tobiasjosborne I was also wondering about your thoughts on Peter Woit's book. I feel that a similar approach is being provided by both Woit and yourself.
Thank you for your work and inspiration.
do these lectures have problem sheets included? i would like to follow along whilst doing the problems
Thankyou for your comment. Problem sheets will not be distributed for this course. (As a substitute you can just do the problems in the book of Serre as they are well designed.)
@@tobiasjosborne ok, thank you!
Where can I learn about this more general stuff regarding symmetries in the context of physics such as that which you mention around 57:00 with fusion categories and replacing composition with categories and so forth?
it is by far not the best reference, but you could take a look at our notes arxiv.org/abs/1811.06670 . At least, these are a good place to find better references. I hope this helps; sincerely, Tobias Osborne
Thank you for your videos! I would love to make a small donation as your lectures have provided so much value to me. Do you have a Patreon or some other platform where I could make a contribution to your work?
Many thanks for your comment! It is really humbling that you would be willing to make a donation! As it happens these videos are produced on (and with) university property. Because my work is publicly funded, I am actually not allowed to accept any form of payment or donation. My channel is not monetised. However, I am currently in the process of finding a legal way to donate potential profits to charity (not so easy, but I am investigating possibilities). If I manage to find a good way to do this then I will revisit this comment and post about ways to contribute. Until then, best wishes!
Wonderful course!And would you like to share your lecture notes online?
I don't really have notes; I work mostly from the book I recommended and add stuff as I go. But I believe someone is typing them up.
The board cleaning is never not satisfying to watch
I am typesetting the notes for these lectures. Anyone would like to collaborate?
Hey, have you typeset the notes? I am interested in contributing if all the notes are not completely typeset yet.
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